View Full Version : National power blackout emergency in Spain/Portugal
Eric J (Viking)
28th April 2025, 16:37
A massive power cut has hit large parts of Spain and Portugal cyberattack… 🤷♂️
The president of the European Council and the Portuguese prime minister say there's "no indication" of a cyber attack
The Portuguese electricity operator earlier said the outage was caused by a "rare" atmospheric phenomenon, related to variations in temperatures
The mayor of Madrid warns people to stay off the roads and only call the emergency services if it's "truly urgent"
Spain's electricity operator says some power is being restored to several parts of the Iberian peninsula - but trains won't resume today
People report driving to find open petrol stations, teaching in the dark - and trying to find beer pumps in Benidorm
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/c9wpq8xrvd9t
Eric J (Viking)
28th April 2025, 19:04
More here
LONDON -- Millions of people in Spain, Portugal and parts of southern France lost power on Monday following a "severe disruption" in the European electrical system, the Spanish prime minister said.
The cause of the disruption is still unknown, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said in remarks Monday evening local time.
The Spanish government said it called an emergency crisis meeting to fix the situation as soon as possible.
Red Eléctrica, the corporation that operates the national electricity grid in Spain, said it is working on restoring power to mainland Spain and Portugal.
Nearly half of the substations have power again, Red Eléctrica said in an update Monday night local time.
"Supply is being progressively restored in all electrical areas of the territory, with 45% of the substation parks of the transmission network already energized," the company said in an update.
Red Eléctrica previously said Monday afternoon that electricity should be fully restored within six to 10 hours.
The company said it was also working to provide power from generators, which is part of the procedure for restoring power supply.
https://abcnews.go.com/International/power-outages-hit-spain-portugal-parts-france-official/story?id=121233588
Look at this, trains stopping mid journey
https://x.com/SolanaSensei/status/1916842255458898115?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1916842255458898115%7Ctwgr% 5E1f83842d3e576bc62cd9fede3ceaf1f87de9c706%7Ctwcon%5Es1_c10&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.zerohedge.com%2Fgeopolitical%2Fspain-hit-massive-really-massive-power-blackout
Bill Ryan
28th April 2025, 19:50
In 10 minutes time, the Redacted team of Clayton and Natali Morris will be covering this story. They lived in Portugal for quite a while before moving back to the US a few months ago. Natali herself is partly Portuguese, and speaks the language fluently.
EUROPE'S BLACKOUT CRISIS: "Nothing works!"
https://www.youtube.com/@RedactedNews/streams (https://youtube.com/@RedactedNews/streams)
Edit to add:
Not as informative or interesting as I'd expected. Other reports, including those not yet published, may be much more detailed in their analysis of exactly what happened and why.
Eric J (Viking)
28th April 2025, 19:58
Panic-buying sweeps blackout-hit Spain and Portugal
And there are fears that thugs will exploit the chaos and darkness to loot shops after nightfall.
One shopper Alfonso Romay wrote on X: “It’s incredible, the collective paranoia. The power goes out for five hours, and look at the supermarket.
“The water jugs in the image lasted less than one minute.”
More here
https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/34685709/spain-portugal-power-cuts-internet/?utm_medium=Social&utm_campaign=sunmaintwitter&utm_source=Twitter#Echobox=1745866597
Bill Ryan
28th April 2025, 20:09
From Michael Shellenburger:
https://www.public.news/p/over-reliance-on-renewables-behind
Over-Reliance on Renewables behind Catastrophic Blackouts in Spain
Excess solar resulted in too little “inertia,” making the whole system vulnerable
https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/w_1456,c_limit,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2Fcfc69db2-e148-45e4-9fdf-b254d496ff89_6000x4000.heic
(https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2Fcfc69db2-e148-45e4-9fdf-b254d496ff89_6000x4000.heic)People board commuter buses outside the Atocha train station in Madrid after its closure as a massive power outage hits Spain on April 28, 2025. Power went out across all of Spain and Portugal today, cutting cellphone and internet networks, halting trains and trapping people in elevators, officials said.
Six days ago, the media celebrated (https://www.pv-magazine.com/2025/04/22/spain-hits-first-weekday-of-100-renewable-power-on-national-grid/) a significant milestone: Spain’s national grid operated entirely on renewable energy for the first time during a weekday.
At 12:35 pm today local time, the lights went out across Spain and Portugal, and parts of France. Although power was quickly restored in France, it could take a week (https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/spain-portugal-power-outage-cut-electricity-live-updates-b2740780.html) to fully restore power in Spain and Portugal.
In an instant, the electric hum of modern life — trains, hospitals, airports, phones, traffic lights, cash registers — fell silent. Tens of millions of people instantly plunged into chaos, confusion, and darkness. People got stuck in elevators. Subways stopped between stations. Gas stations couldn’t pump fuel. Grocery stores couldn’t process payments. Air traffic controllers scrambled as systems failed and planes were diverted. In hospitals, backup generators sputtered on, but in many cases could not meet full demand. Cell towers collapsed under surges and outages.
https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/w_1456,c_limit,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F5a471ae2-2b54-4288-b0ac-759c0295908b_4112x2741.heic
(https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F5a471ae2-2b54-4288-b0ac-759c0295908b_4112x2741.heic)People queue to try to withdraw cash money at an ATM as credit card payment is unavailable due to a massive power outage in Spain, in Madrid on April 28, 2025.
It was one of the largest peacetime blackouts Europe has ever seen. And it was not random. It was not an unforeseeable event. It was the exact failure that many of us (https://www.congress.gov/117/meeting/house/111365/witnesses/HHRG-117-IF02-Wstate-ShellenbergerM-20210324.pdf) have been, repeatedly (https://www.energy.senate.gov/services/files/B3F496B5-ADF4-457F-94C8-4257680DCB32), warning lawmakers about for years — warnings that Europe’s political leaders systematically chose to ignore.
~~~
The rest of the article is for subscribers. But here are some further extracts, courtesy of Zero Hedge: (https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/spain-hit-massive-really-massive-power-blackout)
...none of this should have been a surprise. The underlying physics had been understood for years, and the specific vulnerabilities had been spelled out repeatedly in technical warnings that policymakers ignored.
...
As countries replaced heavy, spinning plants with lightweight, inverter-based generation, the grid became faster, lighter, and far more sensitive to disruptions. That basic physical reality was spelled out in public warnings as far back as 2017.
...
Although political leaders promised that renewable energy would provide stable, affordable power, in practice, Spain grew more reliant on the remaining nuclear and natural gas plants to sustain inertia — even as the government pushes them to close.
...
Despite all these warnings, political and regulatory energy in Europe remained focused on accelerating renewable deployment, not upgrading the grid’s basic stability. In Spain, solar generation continued to climb rapidly through 2023 and early 2024.
Coal plants closed. Nuclear units retired.
On many spring days by 2025, Spain’s midday solar generation exceeded its total afternoon demand, leading to frequent negative electricity prices.
The system was being pushed to the limit.
And today, at 12:35 pm, it broke.
...
Spain’s blackout wasn’t just a technical failure. It was a political and strategic failure.
...
Unless Spain rapidly invests in synthetic inertia, maintains and expands its nuclear fleet, or adds some other new form of heavy rotating generation, the risk of future blackouts will only grow worse.
Tintin
28th April 2025, 20:25
From Michael Shellenburger:
https://www.public.news/p/over-reliance-on-renewables-behind
Over-Reliance on Renewables behind Catastrophic Blackouts in Spain
Excess solar resulted in too little “inertia,” making the whole system vulnerable
[/INDENT]
Just what the P.T.A (Powers That Are) would orchestrate - and have. I'm really beginning to wonder whether a mass kinetic effort from populations may begin to happen. Prayer matters, and it does need to be practised, but, may this be a catalyst for some meaningful pushback. It just may, we'll see.
I do hope that muthaWEFers (after Clif High) be wary; very wary. Have we reached a tipping point?
Ben
28th April 2025, 21:04
Quote from The Guardian
"Spanish government sources said the power cut originated at 12.33pm, when, for five seconds, 15 gigawatts of the energy that was being produced - equivalent to 60% of all the energy that was being used - suddenly disappeared"
Oh right, that makes total sense.
Ravenlocke
28th April 2025, 21:30
https://x.com/ukcityweather/status/1916854488289235295
1916854488289235295
Ravenlocke
28th April 2025, 21:37
Text:
Translated by
Grok
"What the hell is going on in Spain?"
Around half past eleven today, there was an almost nationwide blackout in Spain and Portugal.
Small parts of southern France were apparently also briefly affected but had power back relatively quickly.
The Portuguese grid operator has so far cited weather-related oscillations in power lines as the likely cause, which led to the collapse of the power grid.
At the time of the load shedding, Spain’s power supply was in a very fragile state: 70% of the electricity came from generators that do not have grid-synchronous rotating masses.
Grid-synchronous rotating masses refer to turbines in nuclear, coal, gas, or hydroelectric power plants that drive the generators of these plants.
The rotational speed of these turbines is synchronized with the frequency of the power grid.
The grid frequency is thus coupled to the rotational energy of the turbines.
If the frequency drops, it means that the load on the grid exceeds the output of the connected power plants.
In this case, the rotational energy of the turbines is converted into electricity, which supports the grid.
The valves on the turbines of the power plants respond by opening further to stabilize the grid.
The opposite case also exists: Here, excess power on the grid is converted into rotational energy, causing the valves on the turbines to close to adjust to the new load.
The rotational energy of the turbines is not large compared to the grid’s electricity consumption but is sufficient to support excessive load or absorb surplus power until the valves have time to react.
This principle of grid-synchronous rotating masses has been the foundation of our power grids for over 100 years and ensures that, every second, as much electricity is produced as is consumed.
For the past two decades, we in Europe have been massively expanding electricity generators that do not have grid-synchronous turbines but instead produce direct current, which is converted into alternating current using inverters:
Wind and solar power.
These inverters can produce very convincing alternating current but cannot replace the function of grid-synchronous rotating masses.
The more wind and solar energy is on the grid, the fewer grid-synchronous turbines from conventional power plants are available.
The fewer grid-synchronous turbines there are, the less rotating mass is available as a buffer to absorb instantaneous load fluctuations.
If the buffers are insufficient, even small fluctuations can quickly cause the grid frequency to deviate too far from the ideal value of 50 Hz.
In response, consumers and producers alike disconnect from the grid for self-protection, which can trigger a cascading collapse.
What exactly caused the "ship to capsize" in Spain is not yet clear.
However, we do know that the grid in Spain was in a highly volatile state at the time of the collapse.
https://x.com/NoahRettberg/status/1916881745930056128
1916881745930056128
Ravenlocke
28th April 2025, 21:41
https://x.com/justinbroadcast/status/1916963455393038367
1916963455393038367
https://x.com/justinbroadcast/status/1916950471891091742
1916950471891091742
https://x.com/justinbroadcast/status/1916955197718355968
1916955197718355968
Strat
28th April 2025, 21:44
I have a friend in Madrid, I've asked her what's going on and when she gets back to me I'll report in here. If yall have any questions for her (within reason) let me know.
Ravenlocke
28th April 2025, 21:44
https://x.com/6180339X/status/1916859747434643870
1916859747434643870
Ravenlocke
28th April 2025, 21:49
Text:
⚡️I'M BACK FROM THE BLACKOUT!
Spain, Portugal, and part of France have been under a complete power blackout for 10 hours. No electricity, no mobile data, no calls, nothing.
Let me tell you how I lived through it from the inside, if it ever happens in your country, you'll remember this post 👇🏻
I was in Murcia, Spain, in the middle of a Zoom work call when plash, the power went out. Well, that’s not so rare. The first thing I did was tell the others, who were in Málaga (400 km away), that I had lost power (mobile data was still). Their reply: "Hostia, it's out here too!" Me: WTF? But it can’t have gone out everywhere in the country, right? Right???
THE BLACKOUT
Damn, I wasn’t expecting this bonus episode of Black Mirror. But yep, it was a massive blackout for unknown reasons, hitting all of Spain/Portugal/France. A few minutes later, mobile networks and data collapsed too! I had never lived through anything like this.
I was literally hearing the news through a portable radio I barely remembered owning. There was no other way. Anyone who didn’t have a battery radio was absolutely cut off from the world. Mobile data started to work only sporadically, and calls began to collapse until they completely stopped working. In fact, as the hours passed, it went from "mobile data works a bit" to "nothing at all."
All the traffic lights in every city went out, so people had to give way as best as they could. And the most amazing part is that there were no major accidents across the entire country. I biked back home from the office without any trouble. Sirens could be heard nonstop, but everyone was driving with incredible caution, something I didn’t expect! Respect.
Hospitals were a huge concern, and the radio couldn't stop talking about them. A friend's mother was scheduled for surgery today, and I haven’t had news yet, but I’m trusting that everything went well: basically, they kept operating thanks to generators. No surgeries were left half-finished (although lit were postponed), and all ICU ventilation systems kept running for the patients who depended on them to stay alive. Diesel distributors were working at full capacity, delivering fuel wherever it was needed. Still, the chaos around ambulances, communications, and logistics was enormous. Don't envy the women who gave birth today.
Many people got trapped in elevators and since emergency lines were overwhelmed, it took quite a while to rescue them all across the country. My wife got stuck with the car inside the garage and had to walk back home. Then, since the intercom wasn’t working and she had forgotten her keys inside the car, she had to shout until I came down to open the door for her.
Of course, a whole army of doomsday preppers rushed to the supermarkets to buy toilet paper, water jugs, and dog food. Pandemic 2.0.
And well, it might sound silly compared to all of this, but the countdown for all the freezers in the country had started ticking... Imagine the stench that was about to hit with half the country’s meat and fish rotting!
And what did the people of Murcia do after 5 hours when it was clear this thing was going to last a while? Well, what any sane man or woman would do: go out for drinks since it was still daylight! The streets and promenades were packed with people walking, chatting about the situation, complaining about not having internet, walking their dogs, sunbathing, and drinking beers at the bars nonstop... On the radio, a bar owner said their biggest worry was that the beer was warming up and needed to be drunk quickly... Oh, my dear little Spain!
Anyway, unbelievable. A mix between science fiction and Kafkaesque surrealism. A day to never forget. Well, actually, it’s not even over yet: as I write these lines, I'm watching the last lights of sunset, facing a dark city skyline straight out of a dystopian movie. Hopefully, you’ll be able to read these lines soon.
So, what do you think would happen in your country if there was a 10-hour blackout?
https://x.com/javilopen/status/1916958573000790198
1916958573000790198
https://x.com/MahalaxmiRaman/status/1916942484577415672
1916942484577415672
Ravenlocke
28th April 2025, 21:54
https://x.com/justinbroadcast/status/1916944925469642762
1916944925469642762
SilentFeathers
28th April 2025, 22:54
From Michael Shellenburger:
https://www.public.news/p/over-reliance-on-renewables-behind
Over-Reliance on Renewables behind Catastrophic Blackouts in Spain
Excess solar resulted in too little “inertia,” making the whole system vulnerable
[/INDENT]
Just what the P.T.A (Powers That Are) would orchestrate - and have. I'm really beginning to wonder whether a mass kinetic effort from populations may begin to happen. Prayer matters, and it does need to be practised, but, may this be a catalyst for some meaningful pushback. It just may, we'll see.
I do hope that muthaWEFers (after Clif High) be wary; very wary. Have we reached a tipping point?
It appears (to me) like some kind of test.
Any type of power outage in any western like country for more than 3 days would cause serious panic and chaos, especially in the inner cities and surrounding densely populated areas. Many just live day to day and would be completely without food in a couple to few days later. All the grocery stores would be emptied in 48 hrs. or less and if the power remained out for any length of time most food places wouldn't be restocked and people would become hungry, angry, desperate, AND DANGEROUS.
Many don't realize how fragile civilization is right now.
We are actually living in an extinction level event right now in my opinion. Humanity is just being propped up through technology and propaganda right now. (and stupidity and/or ignorance).
Shutting off the power to several countries for an extended period of time would be more catastrophic than nuking a few of their cities.....
Strat
28th April 2025, 22:56
I have a friend in Madrid, I've asked her what's going on and when she gets back to me I'll report in here. If yall have any questions for her (within reason) let me know.
Power's back on at 12:30AM
EDIT:
Any type of power outage in any western like country for more than 3 days would cause serious panic and chaos, especially in the inner cities and surrounding densely populated areas. Many just live day to day and would be completely without food in a couple to few days later. All the grocery stores would be emptied in 48 hrs. or less and if the power remained out for any length of time most food places wouldn't be restocked and people would become hungry, angry, desperate, AND DANGEROUS.
I don't have an opinion on whether or not it was planned but I definitely agree it's a serious issue. You're almost guaranteed to have people lose their lives. This happens in FL after hurricanes hit and power is lost. Sometimes backup generators aren't enough or fail in places like retirement homes and the older folks just can't tolerate the heat.
RatRodRob...RRR
28th April 2025, 22:57
I have a friend in Madrid, I've asked her what's going on and when she gets back to me I'll report in here. If yall have any questions for her (within reason) let me know.
Yeah ive got a question, ive always got a question, got nothin to do with what we're talking about, but can you put chicken salt on chicken.....?
Seriously though, that Simpsons prediction of a Blackout on 30th April 2025 is just nuts, so in parts of Europe did these blackouts come a day earlier than the Simpsons predicted, or will it get much worse on the 30th, thats tomorrow........ Got me popcorn.
RRR
RatRodRob...RRR
28th April 2025, 23:03
https://x.com/6180339X/status/1916859747434643870
1916859747434643870
Its funny how the "experts" tell us to stock up on emergency supplies to get you through something like these blackouts, and the MMM call it "panic buying", yeah i know that there are fools out there that do panic, but most of us go stock up in an orderly manner to simply make sure we have the necessary goods to get by in such situations.
RRR
RatRodRob...RRR
28th April 2025, 23:12
https://x.com/justinbroadcast/status/1916944925469642762
1916944925469642762
Cash is King
AngelArmy
29th April 2025, 02:06
If you think power outages today was a bad, wait til the next massive solar storm hits. Europe must invest in space now to secure our future
@AschbacherJosef
Tintin
29th April 2025, 09:02
Something a little 'lighter' but relevant. Here's Coco Gauff (tennis player) being interviewed, and then?
This purports to include the moment power went out, presumably at the Madrid WTA tournament (https://www.wtatennis.com/tournaments/2025#month-04):
https://video.twimg.com/ext_tw_video/1916804062089203712/pu/vid/avc1/1080x600/bQcwrUWGMpicvDmf.mp4?tag=12
Eric J (Viking)
29th April 2025, 09:29
A friend of mine lives in Spain. He’s off grid so he was sort of ok.
But one thing he mentioned is that the car battery was dead.
CME anyone?
Update for Rizotto. His wife has had no problems with her car battery … 🤷♂️
Rizotto
29th April 2025, 09:42
A friend of mine lives in Spain. He’s off grid so he was sort of ok.
But one thing he mentioned is that the car battery was dead.
CME anyone?
Could your friend find out if others' car batteries also went dead? According to space weather news, there were no recent solar flares or solar CME.
But there is always the possibility of an EMP from a nuclear detonation at high altitude. Which is apparently difficult to determine.
Now... who is at odds with Spain over a certain genocide, and also has nukes? Oh yeah!...
seekingtruth
29th April 2025, 13:45
I am in Spain, and my family lives in multiple regions in Spain and Portugal. The official stories so far have been laughable - the first one given was this - "extreme weather" - it is spring here. lol.
There was some panic buying but overall everyone was pretty chilled, hanging out in parks and bars etc.
However, everyone was worried if it were to go on for more than a day or two. We've all seen enough disaster movies.
The other thing was that even after power came back on, comms networks stayed down. Mobile, phone lines and internet all remained down for hours. Did not feel organic that is for sure.
Also, when has anyone ever seen a blackout across entire nations before? I have lived in third-world countries and never seen a nation-wide blackout, only ever been local at worst.
seekingtruth
29th April 2025, 13:58
A friend of mine lives in Spain. He’s off grid so he was sort of ok.
But one thing he mentioned is that the car battery was dead.
CME anyone?
ours was/is ok, cars are on the roads, everything is back to normal pretty much.
Bill Ryan
29th April 2025, 14:14
Also, when has anyone ever seen a blackout across entire nations before? I have lived in third-world countries and never seen a nation-wide blackout, only ever been local at worst.Last year in Ecuador, when there was a record 6-month drought that badly affected the nation's hydro power system, there were scheduled blackouts, region by region, for 4-6 hours every day but occasionally extending to 10-12 hours. A few times the entire country was blacked out all at once, but only for very short periods.
What impressed me was how quickly everyone got used to it and just adapted. (People in developing countries are probably a lot better at this!)
When traffic lights failed at major intersections, passers-by – just regular local people with no training or police authorization! — jumped in and directed the traffic themselves. (It worked!)
Roadside market stalls, often with no electricity anyway, were quite unaffected, all using nothing but simple cash as they always do. Small but very efficient Chinese generators sold like hot cakes. I learned to manage everything very quickly and the blackouts soon became a routine daily feature, rather like sunrise and sunset.
The key is simply having a few things at home (cash, water, food, batteries, a little gasoline in containers) all on hand to soften the impact. It's cheap and super-easy to do, and Avalon has many threads about this.
But the main thing to be aware of and avoid, that's found everywhere in North America and Europe, is the belief in the fallacy that it could never happen there.
:focus:
Merkaba360
29th April 2025, 16:38
there's lots of predictions of electric grid and/or internet black outs looming.
One has said that the Spain black out was a test to see how people will react. This could make sense with the unusual nationwide blackout. But how do you do that without the grid workers knowing. Some kind of secret control thru the computer system? Advanced secret tech? hmmm
Another is seeing a blackout coming and that they will use it to bring some new tech online. I forget whether that would be internet or electrical. If electrical, then maybe that was the test run for a bigger reset. I don't really have any ideas on what might require a reboot to install some kind of new tech. Or if they need to keep everyone blind while they make some upgrades. It wasn't clear if it would be something to give them more power and control. But seemed like it could possibly be a good thing. But then again, why not just tell people whats happening if its useful for humanity. lol
I feel like tech development is going to really accelerate soon, for a period of a few years lets say. Maybe they want the grid upgraded for various reasons like national security.
Have you guys seen that african guy making the "free energy" device claims. He has it in a car. I think thats not that far as well. This burning oil and coal bullsht is ridiculous. And I think the rise of AI must be coupled with a new energy source. Whether AI's superintelligence helps us invent it soon or if the military releases one of its energy techs since AI and computing use so much energy.......I think a solution is on the way.
Ernie Nemeth
29th April 2025, 16:42
Check out Suspicious Observer, Weather News.
This was a surge in the plasma surrounding Earth due to the Earth's weakening Magnetic Field.
It should not have happened, according to him, for another ten years.
Adjust your timelines, things just 'quickened'.
Ravenlocke
29th April 2025, 16:52
Also, when has anyone ever seen a blackout across entire nations before? I have lived in third-world countries and never seen a nation-wide blackout, only ever been local at worst.Last year in Ecuador, when there was a record 6-month drought that badly affected the nation's hydro power system, there were scheduled blackouts, region by region, for 4-6 hours every day but occasionally extending to 10-12 hours. A few times the entire country was blacked out all at once, but only for very short periods.
What impressed me was how quickly everyone got used to it and just adapted. (People in developing countries are probably a lot better at this!)
When traffic lights failed at major intersections, passers-by – just regular local people with no training or police authorization! — jumped in and directed the traffic themselves. (It worked!)
Roadside market stalls, often with no electricity anyway, were quite unaffected, all using nothing but simple cash as they always do. Small but very efficient Chinese generators sold like hot cakes. I learned to manage everything very quickly and the blackouts soon became a routine daily feature, rather like sunrise and sunset.
The key is simply having a few things at home (cash, water, food, batteries, a little gasoline in containers) all on hand to soften the impact. It's cheap and super-easy to do, and Avalon has many threads about this.
But the main thing to be aware of and avoid, that's found everywhere in North America and Europe, is the belief in the fallacy that it could never happen there.
:focus:
Historically one of the largest blackouts happened in August of 2003 and millions were left without power from Canada to Northeast parts of America.
https://x.com/OSTIGOV/status/1691120037749207041
1691120037749207041
https://x.com/PIUpdate/status/1823760144737689963
1823760144737689963
https://x.com/TodayThatWas/status/1691064835755421696
1691064835755421696
https://x.com/StrangerJosh11/status/1849254657245258160
1849254657245258160
Ernie Nemeth
29th April 2025, 16:55
Thanks.
I had just started dating my wife, we were on vacation on the shores of Lake Huron when it happened.
It was the best black out I ever experienced. Five days of barbecues and fires in front of our cabin! yippee
grapevine
29th April 2025, 18:36
Check out Suspicious Observer, Weather News.
This was a surge in the plasma surrounding Earth due to the Earth's weakening Magnetic Field.
It should not have happened, according to him, for another ten years.
Adjust your timelines, things just 'quickened'.
https://metro.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/SEI_247824970-c9aa.jpg?quality=90&strip=all&w=646
https://metro.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/SEI_247824896-4f28.jpg?quality=90&strip=all&w=646
These pictures appeared in the Metro newspaper today.
"A massive solar storm is set to cause massive blackouts across the UK and the rest of the world today after a rare ‘double punch’ from the sun.
The G3 geomagnetic storm hit Earth on Tuesday, caused by energy, blasted from the Sun to Earth in solar winds.
The effects are expected to be felt today, with heightened geomagnetic activity being predicted over the next few days."
Whole article:
https://metro.co.uk/2025/04/17/massive-solar-storm-cause-blackouts-one-two-punch-sun-22923356/
To be honest, when I first read it I thought it was propaganda support for the coming sun dimming experiments.
meat suit
29th April 2025, 19:26
Like what?? The sun is quiet.. nothing going on...
Ah , the article is from the 17th... Indeed We had auroras on the 17th..
Ernie Nemeth
29th April 2025, 21:00
As I understand it, and I listened to Ben on Rumble last night, this event had to do with Earth's wandering North Pole. Its meandering path toward Russia is wreaking havoc on the Magnetic Field that protects the surface from dangerous inrushes of the plasma (electrons and ions - ions are atoms stripped of outer electrons, thus the electrons...) that circles the planet. He has predicted such events as a precursor to the Micro-nova to follow. But in his estimation these events were not supposed to happen for another decade. The problem is that the North Pole is shifting position much faster than anticipated.
The question now is whether this event was a one off, or if it is the first of many, getting more violent as the Magnetic Field decreases in strength.
...He mentions Gibraltar a few times, and hints that it has been a grounding rod for this type of energy in the past...
sunwings
29th April 2025, 21:22
Satellite view of Europe last night
55086
Here in Barcelona, everyone took advantage of the beautiful weather and truly enjoyed the city.
There were no work emails, no conference calls — not even the ability to make a phone call.
It was a surreal experience, but one that everyone will remember fondly.
To my knowledge, there was no looting, which is rare in such situations, especially in the Western world.
Isserley
30th April 2025, 10:59
What impressed me was how quickly everyone got used to it and just adapted. (People in developing countries are probably a lot better at this!)
Except common people are pretty much the same in all countries and when they get heads-up for such a big event, it makes all the difference.
: rolleyes: at this sentiment of constant division between "western" and "developing" and how the latter is superior.
My whole life I lived in developing ****hole of a country where corruption is the norm and you get used to it same as you get used to periodical electricity reductions (common in the 90s).It is nothing to be impressed about.
Edit : I apologize for harsh reply. Its just one of those bitter days I perodicaly have
Bill Ryan
30th April 2025, 12:29
Edit : I apologize for harsh reply. Its just one of those bitter days I perodicaly have:heart: :grouphug: :heart:
Bruce G Charlton
30th April 2025, 12:47
I lived through many power cuts over several years during the 1970s in Britain - due to strikes and other forms of Industrial Action.
But the thing is - things are different now. Nowadays, fifty years on; in developed nations almost everything needs electricity - whereas in the 1970s you could run a car, heat your home, even run many high street businesses, without mains electricity.
This high and increasing dependence on mains electricity has been substantially top-down imposed and subsidized and exempted from regulations (and alternatives made illegal and taxed) in the UK - so that demand and need just goes up and up; even while electricity generation is being incrementally destroyed by fake-pseudo-"alternatives".
Putting this together, I regard the overall strategy as one of several and simultaneous ways being pursued to destroy civilization - assuming it doesn't destroy itself first.
Bill Ryan
30th April 2025, 13:16
I lived through many power cuts over several years during the 1970s in Britain - due to strikes and other forms of Industrial Action.
But the thing is - things are different now. Nowadays, fifty years on; in developed nations almost everything needs electricity - whereas in the 1970s you could run a car, heat your home, even run many high street businesses, without mains electricity.
This high and increasing dependence on mains electricity has been substantially top-down imposed and subsidized and exempted from regulations (and alternatives made illegal and taxed) in the UK - so that demand and need just goes up and up; even while electricity generation is being incrementally destroyed by fake-pseudo-"alternatives".
Putting this together, I regard the overall strategy as one of several and simultaneous ways being pursued to destroy civilization - assuming it doesn't destroy itself first.Yes, very well put. That's what I was getting at in my post above (https://projectavalon.net/forum4/showthread.php?p=1666129#post1666129) when I said (rather simply and clumsily!) "People in developing countries are probably a lot better at this."
As an example, many farmers and relatively simple rural people in Ecuador don't have fridges or washing machines. It's common to see whole families (3 generations!) washing their clothes in the local rivers as a kind of family weekly ritual. The kids play, everyone has fun, and they often enjoy a simple picnic together.
And unless one gets milk fresh from the cows, ALL milk sold is the stores is UHT (longlife), simply because so many people don't have fridges. And of course many people don't have cars, and are accustomed to walking, cycling, or traveling only on buses.
And EVERYONE living in a rural area has a small garden of some kind where they grow their own vegetables, and many keep cows, goats and chickens, even if just one or two.
The more 'civilized' we all become, the more vulnerable we are to potential catastrophes. It's often been pointed out that if there was a really major cataclysm that affected much of the planet, it would be the indigenous people who would be most likely to make it through unscathed.
:focus:
Bruce G Charlton
30th April 2025, 13:51
@Bill - "It's often been pointed out that if there was a really major cataclysm that affected much of the planet, it would be the indigenous people who would be most likely to make it through unscathed."
As this is so well known; I would guess that The Plan is for the Establishment of the West/ Totalitarian Globalists to bring their military, move-in, and take-over such places; when they've destroyed everywhere else...
Rawhide68
30th April 2025, 15:54
This interview with Bret Weinstein and Ben Davidsson (SunWeatherMan) from almost a year ago comes to mind.
w0Gz7w3l_uE
Timestamps:
(00:00) Introductions
(05:40) Current sun coronal mass ejections
(14:10) Carrington event
(18:00) Transformers
(25:10) Nuclear power plants
(29:30) Earth's magnetic field and pole shift
(42:00) Why do planets' poles shift?
(01:00:00) Super flare or Micro Nova
(01:12:30) Species extinction
(01:18:50) Carbon dating, isotope dating and errors
(01:23:25) Shifting crust and changes in latitude
(01:35:00) Crustal shift evidence summary and mega tsunamis
(01:37:00) New pole positions
(01:39:40) Current solar activity
(01:42:30) Prepping for solar storm
(01:53:40) Underground caves
(01:56:00) Hopeful notes
(02:00:00) Wrap up
Strat
30th April 2025, 23:19
I lived through many power cuts over several years during the 1970s in Britain - due to strikes and other forms of Industrial Action.
But the thing is - things are different now. Nowadays, fifty years on; in developed nations almost everything needs electricity - whereas in the 1970s you could run a car, heat your home, even run many high street businesses, without mains electricity.
This high and increasing dependence on mains electricity has been substantially top-down imposed and subsidized and exempted from regulations (and alternatives made illegal and taxed) in the UK - so that demand and need just goes up and up; even while electricity generation is being incrementally destroyed by fake-pseudo-"alternatives".
Putting this together, I regard the overall strategy as one of several and simultaneous ways being pursued to destroy civilization - assuming it doesn't destroy itself first.Yes, very well put. That's what I was getting at in my post above (https://projectavalon.net/forum4/showthread.php?p=1666129#post1666129) when I said (rather simply and clumsily!) "People in developing countries are probably a lot better at this."
As an example, many farmers and relatively simple rural people in Ecuador don't have fridges or washing machines. It's common to see whole families (3 generations!) washing their clothes in the local rivers as a kind of family weekly ritual. The kids play, everyone has fun, and they often enjoy a simple picnic together.
And unless one gets milk fresh from the cows, ALL milk sold is the stores is UHT (longlife), simply because so many people don't have fridges. And of course many people don't have cars, and are accustomed to walking, cycling, or traveling only on buses.
And EVERYONE living in a rural area has a small garden of some kind where they grow their own vegetables, and many keep cows, goats and chickens, even if just one or two.
The more 'civilized' we all become, the more vulnerable we are to potential catastrophes. It's often been pointed out that if there was a really major cataclysm that affected much of the planet, it would be the indigenous people who would be most likely to make it through unscathed.
:focus:
This was the case with my grandmother during the great depression. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Depression) My family grew all their own food and also had typical farm animals like cows, chickens, etc. They never used their ration stamps.
Ravenlocke
1st May 2025, 00:10
https://x.com/RedpillDrifter/status/1917336751338881494
1917336751338881494
I am B
3rd May 2025, 06:58
I'm Catalan, but since I'm spending some time in france I didn't suffer it personally.
It was preety ominous when at around midday I was chatting with a friend there, and my messages stopped arriving, and just right after, a family member calls me and asks "Do you still have electricity up there?" Before the call suddenly cutting and his phone becoming unreachable.
Everything was really chill. As some said, people enjoyed the day out of the office, or passed the traffic jam as easy as they could. Everyone was convinced light would come back soon after. Bars were full and music was playing.
I feel that is the gift and the bane of spanish society. If it was a EMP, or something more dire I can't help but wonder what people would have done by the 3rd day of blackout, not to mention the absolute lack of preparedness.
That is also a preety notable consequence. As a prepper I find myself now being contacted by many of my friends asking for advice. So far there are 5 UHF/VHF radios on the way that were ordered after being asked about them by some friends and colleagues worried about the situation.
John Hilton
5th May 2025, 12:56
Spain’s Green Energy Grid Failed. We Could Be Next.
Also read the comments below the video.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GgrLg9tmJuk
Ravenlocke
8th May 2025, 22:23
https://x.com/TheInsiderPaper/status/1920438078839071210
1920438078839071210
Translated text:
🔴 #ÚltimaHora. Electrical blackout on the island of La Palma. 30,000 people without power.
For now, the cause is unknown, but everything points to a problem at the Los Guinchos power plant.
🔴 #ÚLTIMAHORA | A power outage leaves a third of the island of La Palma without electricity.
All municipalities in the Aridane Valley are affected, as well as Puntagorda.
https://x.com/GarPadAlex/status/1920417770539217339
1920417770539217339
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